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Join the Chamber

Our members realize that through the Chamber, they can accomplish collectively what no one of them can do individually. More than 450 members (80 percent of them small businesses) work together to enhance the economic climate of Liberty County for business growth and improved quality of life.

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Making the Move to Liberty County

The Liberty County Chamber of Commerce fulfills hundreds of relocation requests each year. Relocation packets are mailed all over the country to those planning on moving to our wonderful community. Our relocation packets come complete with an area phone book, Newcomer’s Guide, Chamber Directory, Demographic & Statistical information, Liberty County Magazine, tourist brochures and information, Real Estate information, a County Street Map, and information from various agencies and businesses throughout the County. The cost of the packet is $15 which covers the postage. To request a Relocation packet, please click here or call (912) 368-4445. Please be sure to include a phone number where we can call you to confirm the details.

African-American heritage is such an important part of Liberty County’s history. These four historic sites provide insight to the lives of African-American ancestors who arrived as slaves, gained their freedom, and then fought for civil rights. Photographers Tammy Lee Bradley of Visit the South and Ralph Daniel captured these soulful photos that will inspire you to visit and experience this culture that has uniquely shaped our community.Dorchester Academy & Museum of African-American History
Location: 8787 E. Oglethorpe Highway in Midway
Hours: Tuesday-Friday 11am-2pm and Saturday & Sunday 2pm-4pm
Contact: 912-884-2347
Admission: No Fee, Donations Welcome

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

The former school, which was founded by the American Missionary Society soon after the Civil War to educate African-Americans, operated until 1940 and then became a cooperative to help area residents with farming, economic and household issues.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

Museum docent Maurice Bacon enjoys telling the history of Dorchester Academy and the people who made the arduous journey from slavery to the fight for education and equal rights.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

A diploma from 1940 serves as a testament to the many students who received their education and graduated from Dorchester Academy. Many were so eager to learn, they walked nine miles one way to the school. The annual Walk to Dorchester is held each June as a fundraiser for the site, and retraces the average distance students walked.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

Dorchester Academy’s most recent historical role was as a site for civil rights activities. The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. planned his campaign to integrate Birmingham during meetings there in the mid-1960’s. The room where he stayed has been preserved and is available to view.

Seabrook Village was a community established through federal land grants made possible by Gen. William T. Sherman’s Field Order 15 in 1865, a policy that came to be known as “40 acres and a mule.”

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

The village, which features eight turn-of-the-century buildings, is dedicated to the authentic portrayal of rural African-American culture from 1865-1930.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

The interactive historic site includes a one-room schoolhouse and visitors and groups may schedule demonstrations of meal grinding, hand-hewn furniture and washing clothes on a scrub board.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

At the one-room schoolhouse, lessons in reading, writing and ‘rithmatic were taught to the tune of a hickory stick. Today, the schoolhouse holds the history of those who struggled and strove to gain an education.

Geechee Kunda is located on lands where the rice, cotton and indigo producing Retreat Plantation once stood. The center was created as a means of contributing to efforts to preserve and perpetuate the knowledge of important African cultural elements in the United States.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

A sugar cane grinder stands ready and is put to use each fall during the annual Sugar Cane Harvest. The public is invited to attend and are treated to fresh sugar cane juice, performances, music, oral history lessons and arts and crafts demonstrations.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

In addition to permanent and rotating exhibits, the center’s year-round activities include classes, workshops, demonstrations and lectures covering a broad spectrum of subjects that allow visitors to explore various aspects of continental and diaspora African culture.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

If you have the occasion to take a meal at Geechee Kunda, you’re in for a treat. Arrangements must be made in advance of course, but foodies will enjoy a home-cooked meal with fresh seafood, shellfish along with fresh fruits and vegetables.

Historic Baptismal Trail
Location: 8808 E. B. Cooper Highway in Riceboro
Hours: Currently closed for repairs, but scheduled to reopen in March. Call for details.
Contact: City of Riceboro at 912-884-2986
Admission: No Fee. Tours are self-guided.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

For almost 100 years this site was an active holy place where the ancestors of the local Geechee communities baptized new members into their faith.

Photo by Tammy Lee Bradley

The site features a boardwalk, benches and picnic tables as well as interpretive signage regarding the surrounding natural habitat and the historical significance of the site.

Photo by Ralph Daniel

Oral and written church history from the surviving descendants of the First African Baptist Church indicate that as early as the 1840s this site was used as a place where the ritual Christian baptism was performed by leaders of a congregation of enslaved people.

Photo by Ralph Daniel

Last year, a baptism was recreated for a photo shoot and the parishioners broke into song, just as their ancestors may have when the baptismal pool was still in use.